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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(6)2022 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35328344

ABSTRACT

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperone Grp94/gp96 appears to be involved in cytoprotection without being required for cell survival. This study compared the effects of Grp94 protein levels on Ca2+ homeostasis, antioxidant cytoprotection and protein-protein interactions between two widely studied cell lines, the myogenic C2C12 and the epithelial HeLa, and two breast cancer cell lines, MDA-MB-231 and HS578T. In myogenic cells, but not in HeLa, Grp94 overexpression exerted cytoprotection by reducing ER Ca2+ storage, due to an inhibitory effect on SERCA2. In C2C12 cells, but not in HeLa, Grp94 co-immunoprecipitated with non-client proteins, such as nNOS, SERCA2 and PMCA, which co-fractionated by sucrose gradient centrifugation in a distinct, medium density, ER vesicular compartment. Active nNOS was also required for Grp94-induced cytoprotection, since its inhibition by L-NNA disrupted the co-immunoprecipitation and co-fractionation of Grp94 with nNOS and SERCA2, and increased apoptosis. Comparably, only the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231, which showed Grp94 co-immunoprecipitation with nNOS, SERCA2 and PMCA, increased oxidant-induced apoptosis after nNOS inhibition or Grp94 silencing. These results identify the Grp94-driven multiprotein complex, including active nNOS as mechanistically involved in antioxidant cytoprotection by means of nNOS activity and improved Ca2+ homeostasis.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms , Cytoprotection , Antioxidants/metabolism , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Cell Line , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Female , Humans
2.
FASEB J ; 34(2): 2269-2286, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31908008

ABSTRACT

SUMOylation is a dynamic, reversible, enzymatic drug-targetable post-translational modification (PTM) reaction where the Small Ubiquitin-like Modifier (SUMO) moieties are attached to proteins. This reaction regulates various biological functions like cell growth, differentiation, and it is crucial for maintaining organ homeostasis. However, the actions of SUMO in skeletal muscle pathophysiology are still not investigated. In this study, we quantified the abundance of the SUMO enzymes and determined the distribution of SUMOylated proteins along the fibers of nine different muscles. We find that skeletal muscles contain a distinctive group of SUMO enzymes and SUMOylated proteins in relation to their different metabolism, functions, and fiber type composition. In addition, before the activation of protein degradation pathways, this unique set is quickly altered in response to muscle sedentariness. Finally, we demonstrated that PAX6 acts as an upstream regulator of the SUMO conjugation reaction, which can become a potential therapeutic marker to prevent muscle diseases generated by inactivity.


Subject(s)
Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Muscular Atrophy/metabolism , Small Ubiquitin-Related Modifier Proteins/metabolism , Sumoylation , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/biosynthesis , Animals , Female , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Muscular Atrophy/pathology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
3.
Int J Mol Sci ; 22(21)2021 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34769220

ABSTRACT

Curcumin administration attenuates muscle disuse atrophy, but its effectiveness against aging-induced, selective loss of mass or force (presarcopenia or asthenia/dynopenia), or combined loss (sarcopenia), remains controversial. A new systemic curcumin treatment was developed and tested in 18-month-old C57BL6J and C57BL10ScSn male mice. The effects on survival, liver toxicity, loss of muscle mass and force, and satellite cell responsivity and commitment were evaluated after 6-month treatment. Although only 24-month-old C57BL10ScSn mice displayed age-related muscle impairment, curcumin significantly increased survival of both strains (+20-35%), without signs of liver toxicity. Treatment prevented sarcopenia in soleus and presarcopenia in EDL of C57BL10ScSn mice, whereas it did not affect healthy-aged muscles of C57BL6J. Curcumin-treated old C57BL10ScSn soleus preserved type-1 myofiber size and increased type-2A one, whereas EDL maintained adult values of total myofiber number and fiber-type composition. Mechanistically, curcumin only partially prevented the age-related changes in protein level and subcellular distribution of major costamere components and regulators. Conversely, it affected satellite cells, by maintaining adult levels of myofiber maturation in old regenerating soleus and increasing percentage of isolated, MyoD-positive satellite cells from old hindlimb muscles. Therefore, curcumin treatment successfully prevents presarcopenia and sarcopenia development by improving satellite cell commitment and recruitment.


Subject(s)
Aging , Curcumin/pharmacology , Muscle, Skeletal , Sarcopenia , Aging/drug effects , Aging/metabolism , Aging/pathology , Animals , Male , Mice , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Sarcopenia/drug therapy , Sarcopenia/metabolism , Sarcopenia/pathology
4.
J Pathol ; 246(4): 433-446, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30066461

ABSTRACT

Skeletal muscle atrophy following unloading or immobilization represents a major invalidating event in bedridden patients. Among mechanisms involved in atrophy development, a controversial role is played by neuronal NOS (nNOS; NOS1), whose dysregulation at the protein level and/or subcellular distribution also characterizes other neuromuscular disorders. This study aimed to investigate unloading-induced changes in nNOS before any evidence of myofiber atrophy, using vastus lateralis biopsies obtained from young healthy subjects after a short bed-rest and rat soleus muscles after exposure to short unloading periods. Our results showed that (1) changes in nNOS subcellular distribution using NADPH-diaphorase histochemistry to detect enzyme activity were observed earlier than using immunofluorescence to visualize the protein; (2) loss of active nNOS from the physiological subsarcolemmal localization occurred before myofiber atrophy, i.e. in 8-day bed-rest biopsies and in 6 h-unloaded rat soleus, and was accompanied by increased nNOS activity in the sarcoplasm; (3) nNOS (Nos1) transcript and protein levels decreased significantly in the rat soleus after 6 h and 1 day unloading, respectively, to return to ambulatory levels after 4 and 7 days of unloading, respectively; (4) unloading-induced nNOS redistribution appeared dependent on mitochondrial-derived oxidant species, indirectly measured by tropomyosin disulfide bonds which had increased significantly in the rat soleus already after a 6 h-unloading bout; (5) activity of displaced nNOS molecules is required for translocation of the FoxO3 transcription factor to myofiber nuclei. FoxO3 nuclear localization in rat soleus increased after 6 h unloading (about four-fold the ambulatory level), whereas it did not when nNOS expression and activity were inhibited in vivo before and during 6 h unloading. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the redistribution of active nNOS molecules from sarcolemma to sarcoplasm not only is ahead of the atrophy of unloaded myofibers, and is induced by increased production of mitochondrial superoxide anion, but also drives FoxO3 activation to initiate muscle atrophy. Copyright © 2018 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Subject(s)
Muscular Atrophy/enzymology , Nitric Oxide Synthase Type I/metabolism , Oxidative Stress , Quadriceps Muscle/enzymology , Sarcolemma/enzymology , Animals , Bed Rest , Disease Models, Animal , Down-Regulation , Female , Forkhead Box Protein O3/metabolism , Healthy Volunteers , Hindlimb Suspension , Humans , Male , Muscular Atrophy/genetics , Muscular Atrophy/pathology , Muscular Atrophy/physiopathology , NADP/metabolism , Nitric Oxide Synthase Type I/genetics , Protein Transport , Quadriceps Muscle/pathology , Quadriceps Muscle/physiopathology , Rats, Wistar , Sarcolemma/pathology , Superoxides/metabolism , Time Factors
5.
J Physiol ; 592(12): 2637-52, 2014 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24710058

ABSTRACT

Antioxidant administration aimed to antagonize the development and progression of disuse muscle atrophy provided controversial results. Here we investigated the effects of curcumin, a vegetal polyphenol with pleiotropic biological activity, because of its ability to upregulate glucose-regulated protein 94 kDa (Grp94) expression in myogenic cells. Grp94 is a sarco-endoplasmic reticulum chaperone, the levels of which decrease significantly in unloaded muscle. Rats were injected intraperitoneally with curcumin and soleus muscle was analysed after 7 days of hindlimb unloading or standard caging. Curcumin administration increased Grp94 protein levels about twofold in muscles of ambulatory rats (P < 0.05) and antagonized its decrease in unloaded ones. Treatment countered loss of soleus mass and myofibre cross-sectional area by approximately 30% (P ≤ 0.02) and maintained a force-frequency relationship closer to ambulatory levels. Indexes of muscle protein and lipid oxidation, such as protein carbonylation, revealed by Oxyblot, and malondialdehyde, measured with HPLC, were significantly blunted in unloaded treated rats compared to untreated ones (P = 0.01). Mechanistic involvement of Grp94 was suggested by the disruption of curcumin-induced attenuation of myofibre atrophy after transfection with antisense grp94 cDNA and by the drug-positive effect on the maintenance of the subsarcolemmal localization of active neuronal nitric oxide synthase molecules, which were displaced to the sarcoplasm by unloading. The absence of additive effects after combined administration of a neuronal nitric oxide synthase inhibitor further supported curcumin interference with this pro-atrophic pathway. In conclusion, curcumin represents an effective and safe tool to upregulate Grp94 muscle levels and to maintain muscle function during unweighting.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/pharmacology , Curcumin/pharmacology , Muscle, Skeletal/drug effects , Muscular Atrophy/metabolism , Nitric Oxide Synthase Type I/metabolism , Animals , Antioxidants/therapeutic use , Curcumin/therapeutic use , Female , Hindlimb Suspension/physiology , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Muscular Atrophy/drug therapy , Muscular Atrophy/physiopathology , Rats, Wistar , Sarcolemma/metabolism
6.
Antioxidants (Basel) ; 12(6)2023 May 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37371910

ABSTRACT

The vegetal polyphenol curcumin displays beneficial effects against skeletal muscle derangement induced by oxidative stress, disuse or aging. Since oxidative stress and inflammation are involved in the progression of muscle dystrophy, the effects of curcumin administration were investigated in the diaphragm of mdx mice injected intraperitoneally or subcutaneously with curcumin for 4-12-24 weeks. Curcumin treatment independently of the way and duration of administration (i) ameliorated myofiber maturation index without affecting myofiber necrosis, inflammation and degree of fibrosis; (ii) counteracted the decrease in type 2X and 2B fiber percentage; (iii) increased about 30% both twitch and tetanic tensions of diaphragm strips; (iv) reduced myosin nitrotyrosination and tropomyosin oxidation; (v) acted on two opposite nNOS regulators by decreasing active AMP-Kinase and increasing SERCA1 protein levels, the latter effect being detectable also in myotube cultures from mdx satellite cells. Interestingly, increased contractility, decreased myosin nitrotyrosination and SERCA1 upregulation were also detectable in the mdx diaphragm after a 4-week administration of the NOS inhibitor 7-Nitroindazole, and were not improved further by a combined treatment. In conclusion, curcumin has beneficial effects on the dystrophic muscle, mechanistically acting for the containment of a deregulated nNOS activity.

7.
J Cell Mol Med ; 14(4): 970-81, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20569277

ABSTRACT

Curcumin is a non-toxic polyphenol with pleiotropic activities and limited bioavailability. We investigated whether a brief exposure to low doses of curcumin would induce in the myogenic C2C12 cell line an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response and protect against oxidative stress. A 3-hr curcumin administration (5-10 microM) increased protein levels of the ER chaperone Grp94, without affecting those of Grp78, calreticulin and haeme-oxygenase-1 (HO-1). Exposure of cells to hydrogen peroxide 24 hrs after the curcumin treatment decreased caspase-12 activation, total protein oxidation and translocation of NF-kappaB to the nucleus, compared with untreated cells. Grp94 overexpression, achieved by means of either stable or transient trasfection, induced comparable cytoprotective effects to hydrogen peroxide. The delayed cytoprotection induced by curcumin acted through Grp94, because the curcumin-induced increase in Grp94 expression was hampered by either stable or transient transfection with antisense cDNA; in these latter cells, the extent of total protein oxidation, as well as the translocation of NF-kappaB to the nucleus, and the percentage of apoptotic cells were comparable to those observed in both curcumin-untreated wild-type and empty vector transfected cells. Defining the mechanism(s) by which Grp94 exerts its antioxidant defence, the determination of cytosolic calcium levels in C2C12 cells by fura-2 showed a significantly reduced amount of releasable calcium from intracellular stores, both in conditions of Grp94 overexpression and after curcumin pre-treatment. Therefore, a brief exposure to curcumin induces a delayed cytoprotection against oxidative stress in myogenic cells by increasing Grp94 protein level, which acts as a regulator of calcium homeostasis.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/metabolism , Curcumin/pharmacology , HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Myoblasts/metabolism , Animals , Apoptosis/drug effects , Calcium/metabolism , Caspase 12/metabolism , Cell Line , Cell Nucleus/drug effects , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Cytoprotection/drug effects , DNA, Complementary/metabolism , Down-Regulation/drug effects , Endoplasmic Reticulum/drug effects , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Endoplasmic Reticulum Chaperone BiP , Hydrogen Peroxide/pharmacology , Intracellular Space/drug effects , Intracellular Space/metabolism , Mice , Myoblasts/cytology , Myoblasts/drug effects , NF-kappa B/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction/drug effects , Protein Transport/drug effects , Stress, Physiological/drug effects , Transfection
8.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1793(2): 239-52, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19000718

ABSTRACT

The endoplasmic-reticulum chaperone Grp94 is required for the cell surface export of molecules involved in the native immune response, in mesoderm induction and muscle development, but the signals responsible for Grp94 recruitment are still obscure. Here we show for the first time that Grp94 undergoes Tyr-phosphorylation in differentiating myogenic C2C12 cells. By means of phospho-proteomic and immunoprecipitation analyses, and the use of Src-specific inhibitors we demonstrate that the Src-tyrosine-kinase Fyn becomes active early after induction of C2C12 cell differentiation, in parallel with the recruitment and the Tyr-phosphorylation of Grp94, which peaks at 6-hour differentiation. Grp94 is Tyr-phosphorylated inside the endoplasmic reticulum by a lumenal Fyn, as indicated by fluorescence and electronmicroscopy immunolocalization, co-immunoprecipitation after chemical cross-linking and by treatment of intact endoplasmic-reticulum vesicles with proteinase K. Furthermore, fractionation of cellular membrane compartments and double-immunofluorescence studies showed that Tyr-phosphorylation of Grp94 is necessary for the protein translocation from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus. These results indicate that Fyn-catalyzed Tyr-phosphorylation of Grp94 is an event required to promote the chaperone export from the endoplasmic reticulum occurring in the early phase of myoblast differentiation.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Myoblasts/cytology , Phosphotyrosine/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fyn/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line , Cell Proliferation , Endoplasmic Reticulum/ultrastructure , Golgi Apparatus/ultrastructure , Mice , Myoblasts/enzymology , Myoblasts/ultrastructure , Phosphorylation , Protein Binding , Protein Transport , Rats , Substrate Specificity , src-Family Kinases/metabolism
9.
J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle ; 11(3): 802-819, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32154658

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Unloading/disuse induces skeletal muscle atrophy in bedridden patients and aged people, who cannot prevent it by means of exercise. Because interventions against known atrophy initiators, such as oxidative stress and neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) redistribution, are only partially effective, we investigated the involvement of melusin, a muscle-specific integrin-associated protein and a recognized regulator of protein kinases and mechanotransduction in cardiomyocytes. METHODS: Muscle atrophy was induced in the rat soleus by tail suspension and in the human vastus lateralis by bed rest. Melusin expression was investigated at the protein and transcript level and after treatment of tail-suspended rats with atrophy initiator inhibitors. Myofiber size, sarcolemmal nNOS activity, FoxO3 myonuclear localization, and myofiber carbonylation of the unloaded rat soleus were studied after in vivo melusin replacement by cDNA electroporation, and muscle force, myofiber size, and atrogene expression after adeno-associated virus infection. In vivo interference of exogenous melusin with dominant-negative kinases and other atrophy attenuators (Grp94 cDNA; 7-nitroindazole) on size of unloaded rat myofibers was also explored. RESULTS: Unloading/disuse reduced muscle melusin protein levels to about 50%, already after 6 h in the tail-suspended rat (P < 0.001), and to about 35% after 8 day bed rest in humans (P < 0.05). In the unloaded rat, melusin loss occurred despite of the maintenance of ß1D integrin levels and was not abolished by treatments inhibiting mitochondrial oxidative stress, or nNOS activity and redistribution. Expression of exogenous melusin by cDNA transfection attenuated atrophy of 7 day unloaded rat myofibers (-31%), compared with controls (-48%, P = 0.001), without hampering the decrease in sarcolemmal nNOS activity and the increase in myonuclear FoxO3 and carbonylated myofibers. Infection with melusin-expressing adeno-associated virus ameliorated contractile properties of 7 day unloaded muscles (P ≤ 0.05) and relieved myofiber atrophy (-33%) by reducing Atrogin-1 and MurF-1 transcripts (P ≤ 0.002), despite of a two-fold increase in FoxO3 protein levels (P = 0.03). Atrophy attenuation by exogenous melusin did not result from rescue of Akt, ERK, or focal adhesion kinase activity, because it persisted after co-transfection with dominant-negative kinase forms (P < 0.01). Conversely, melusin cDNA transfection, combined with 7-nitroindazole treatment or with cDNA transfection of the nNOS-interacting chaperone Grp94, abolished 7 day unloaded myofiber atrophy. CONCLUSIONS: Disuse/unloading-induced loss of melusin is an early event in muscle atrophy which occurs independently from mitochondrial oxidative stress, nNOS redistribution, and FoxO3 activation. Only preservation of melusin levels and sarcolemmal nNOS localization fully prevented muscle mass loss, demonstrating that both of them act as independent, but complementary, master switches of muscle disuse atrophy.


Subject(s)
Cytoskeletal Proteins/metabolism , Forkhead Box Protein O3/metabolism , Hindlimb Suspension/physiology , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Muscular Atrophy/genetics , Nitric Oxide Synthase Type I/metabolism , Animals , Female , Humans , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Transfection
10.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 107(2): 549-57, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19478193

ABSTRACT

It is presently unknown whether oxidative stress increases in disused skeletal muscle in humans. Markers of oxidative stress were investigated in biopsies from the vastus lateralis muscle, collected from healthy subjects before [time 0 (T0)], after 1 wk (T8), and after 5 wk (T35) of bed rest. An 18% decrease in fiber cross-sectional area was detected in T35 biopsies (P<0.05). Carbonylation of muscle proteins significantly increased about twofold at T35 (P<0.02) and correlated positively with the decrease in fiber cross-sectional area (P=0.04). Conversely, T8 biopsies showed a significant increase in protein levels of heme oxygenase-1 and glucose-regulated protein-75 (Grp75)/mitochondrial heat shock protein-70, two stress proteins involved in the antioxidant defense (P<0.05). Heme oxygenase-1 increase, which involved a larger proportion of slow fibers compared with T0, appeared blunted in T35 biopsies. Grp75 protein level increased threefold in T8 biopsies and localized especially in slow fibers (P<0.025), to decrease significantly in T35 biopsies (P<0.05). Percent change in Grp75 levels positively correlated with fiber cross-sectional area (P=0.01). Parallel investigations on rat soleus muscles, performed after 1-15 days of hindlimb suspension, showed that Grp75 protein levels significantly increased after 24 h of unloading (P = 0.02), i.e., before statistically significant evidence of muscle atrophy, to decrease thereafter in relation to the degree of muscle atrophy (P=0.03). Therefore, in humans as in rodents, disuse muscle atrophy is characterized by increased protein carbonylation and by the blunting of the antioxidant stress response evoked by disuse.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/metabolism , Muscular Atrophy/metabolism , Oxidative Stress , Quadriceps Muscle/metabolism , Adult , Animals , Bed Rest , Biopsy , HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Heme Oxygenase-1/metabolism , Hindlimb Suspension , Humans , Male , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Muscular Atrophy/pathology , Protein Carbonylation , Quadriceps Muscle/pathology , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Time Factors , Young Adult
11.
Cell Stress Chaperones ; 13(4): 483-95, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18528785

ABSTRACT

Rat hindlimb muscles constitutively express the inducible heat shock protein 72 (Hsp70), apparently in proportion to the slow myosin content. Since it remains controversial whether chronic Hsp70 expression reflects the overimposed stress, we investigated Hsp70 cellular distribution in fast muscles of the posterior rat hindlimb after (1) mild exercise training (up to 30 m/min treadmill run for 1 h/day), which induces a remodeling in fast fiber composition, or (2) prolonged exposure to normobaric hypoxia (10%O(2)), which does not affect fiber-type composition. Both conditions increased significantly protein Hsp70 levels in the skeletal muscle. Immunohistochemistry showed the labeling for Hsp70 in subsets of both slow/type 1 and fast/type 2A myofibers of control, sedentary, and normoxic rats. Endurance training increased about threefold the percentage of Hsp70-positive myofibers (P < 0.001), and changed the distribution of Hsp70 immunoreactivity, which involved a larger subset of both type 2A and intermediate type 2A/2X myofibers (P < 0.001) and vascular smooth muscle cells. Hypoxia induced Hsp70 immunoreactivity in smooth muscle cells of veins and did not increase the percentage of Hsp70-positive myofibers; however, sustained exposure to hypoxia affected the distribution of Hsp70 immunoreactivity, which appeared detectable in a very small subset of type 2A fibers, whereas it concentrated in type 1 myofibers (P < 0.05) together with the labeling for heme-oxygenase isoform 1, a marker of oxidative stress. Therefore, the chronic induction of Hsp70 expression in rat skeletal muscles is not obligatory related to the slow fiber phenotype but reveals the occurrence of a stress response.


Subject(s)
HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/cytology , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Physical Conditioning, Animal , Animals , Biomarkers/metabolism , Cell Hypoxia , Heme Oxygenase-1/metabolism , Hindlimb/metabolism , Male , Malondialdehyde/blood , Muscle Fibers, Slow-Twitch/cytology , Muscle Fibers, Slow-Twitch/enzymology , Muscle, Skeletal/anatomy & histology , Organ Size , Oxidative Stress , Protein Transport , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
12.
FASEB J ; 17(8): 923-5, 2003 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12670879

ABSTRACT

Increase in free intracellular calcium [Ca 2+]i plays a crucial role in cardiomyocyte ischemic injury. Here we demonstrate that overexpression of the sarcoplasmic-reticulum stress-protein Grp94 reduces myocyte necrosis due to calcium overload or simulated ischemia. Selective three- to eightfold Grp94 increase, with no change in Grp78 or calreticulin amount, was achieved by stable transfection of skeletal C2C12 and cardiac H9c2 muscle cells. After exposure to the calcium ionophore A23187, LDH release from five different Grp94-overexpressing clones of either C2C12 and H9c2 origin was significantly lower than that of control ones and [Ca 2+]i increase was significantly delayed. The number of necrotic cells, evaluated by propidium iodide uptake, was reduced when cells from the Grp94-overexpressing H9c2 clone were exposed to conditions simulating ischemia. Experiments performed in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes co-transfected with grp94 and the green fluorescent protein (GFP) cDNAs validated the protective effect of Grp94 overexpression. A lower percentage of propidium-iodide positive/GFP-fluorescent myocytes co-expressing exogenous Grp94, with respect to myocytes expressing GFP alone, was observed after exposure to either A23187 (6.6% vs. 14.0%, respectively) or simulated ischemia (8.5% vs. 17.7%, respectively). In conclusion, the selective increase in Grp94 protects cardiomyocytes from both ischemia and calcium overload counteracting [Ca 2+]i elevations.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Animals , Blotting, Western , Calcimycin/pharmacology , Cell Line , Endoplasmic Reticulum Chaperone BiP , HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/genetics , Homeostasis , Ionophores/pharmacology , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Mice , Myocardial Ischemia , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Myocytes, Cardiac/pathology , Necrosis , Rats , Transfection
13.
Antioxid Redox Signal ; 20(16): 2479-96, 2014 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24093939

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Redox and growth-factor imbalance fosters muscle disuse atrophy. Since the endoplasmic-reticulum chaperone Grp94 is required for folding insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) and for antioxidant cytoprotection, we investigated its involvement in muscle mass loss due to inactivity. RESULTS: Rat soleus muscles were transfected in vivo and analyzed after 7 days of hindlimb unloading, an experimental model of muscle disuse atrophy, or standard caging. Increased muscle protein carbonylation and decreased Grp94 protein levels (p<0.05) characterized atrophic unloaded solei. Recombinant Grp94 expression significantly reduced atrophy of transfected myofibers, compared with untransfected and empty-vector transfected ones (p<0.01), and decreased the percentage of carbonylated myofibers (p=0.001). Conversely, expression of two different N-terminal deleted Grp94 species did not attenuate myofiber atrophy. No change in myofiber trophism was detected in transfected ambulatory solei. The absence of effects on atrophic untransfected myofibers excluded a major role for IGFs folded by recombinant Grp94. Immunoprecipitation and confocal microscopy assays to investigate chaperone interaction with muscle atrophy regulators identified 160 kDa neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) as a new Grp94 partner. Unloading was demonstrated to untether nNOS from myofiber subsarcolemma; here, we show that such nNOS localization, revealed by means of NADPH-diaphorase histochemistry, appeared preserved in unloaded myofibers expressing recombinant Grp94, compared to those transfected with the empty vector or deleted Grp94 cDNA (p<0.02). INNOVATION: Grp94 interacts with nNOS and prevents its untethering from sarcolemma in unloaded myofibers. CONCLUSION: Maintenance of Grp94 expression is sufficient to counter unloading atrophy and oxidative stress by mechanistically stabilizing nNOS-multiprotein complex at the myofiber sarcolemma.


Subject(s)
Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Muscular Disorders, Atrophic/metabolism , Muscular Disorders, Atrophic/pathology , Nitric Oxide Synthase Type I/metabolism , Sarcolemma/enzymology , Animals , Enzyme Stability , Female , Muscular Disorders, Atrophic/enzymology , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Sarcolemma/metabolism
14.
PLoS One ; 9(1): e86198, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24489700

ABSTRACT

While the mechanism by which Grp94 displays its chaperone function with client peptides in the cell has been elucidated extensively, much less is known about the nature and properties of how Grp94 can engage binding to proteins once it is exposed on the cell surface or liberated in the extra-cellular milieu, as occurs in pathological conditions. In this work, we wanted to investigate the molecular aspects and structural characteristics of complexes that Grp94 forms with human IgG, posing the attention on the influence that glycosylation of Grp94 might have on the binding capacity to IgG, and on the identification of sites involved in the binding. To this aim, we employed both native, fully glycosylated and partially glycosylated Grp94, and recombinant, non-glycosylated Grp94, as well as IgG subunits, in different experimental conditions, including the physiological setting of human plasma. Regardless of the species and type, Grp94 engages a similar, highly specific and stable binding with IgG that involves sites located in the N-terminal domain of Grp94 and the hinge region of whole IgG. Grp94 does not form stable complex with Fab, F(ab)2 or Fc. Glycosylation turns out to be an obstacle to the Grp94 binding to IgG, although this negative effect can be counteracted by ATP and spontaneously also disappears in time in a physiological setting of incubation. ATP does not affect at all the binding capacity of non-glycosylated Grp94. However, complexes that native, partially glycosylated Grp94 forms with IgG in the presence of ATP show strikingly different characteristics with respect to those formed in absence of ATP. Results have relevance for the mechanism regulating the formation of stable Grp94-IgG complexes in vivo, in the pathological conditions associated with the extra-cellular location of Grp94.


Subject(s)
Immunoglobulin G/metabolism , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Animals , Glycosylation , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/chemistry , Immunoglobulin G/ultrastructure , Membrane Glycoproteins/chemistry , Membrane Glycoproteins/ultrastructure , Protein Binding , Protein Structure, Secondary , Rats
15.
PLoS One ; 8(10): e76659, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24124584

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Exposure to intermittent hypoxia (IH) may enhance cardiac function and protects heart against ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. To elucidate the underlying mechanisms, we developed a cardioprotective IH model that was characterized at hemodynamic, biochemical and molecular levels. METHODS: Mice were exposed to 4 daily IH cycles (each composed of 2-min at 6-8% O2 followed by 3-min reoxygenation for 5 times) for 14 days, with normoxic mice as controls. Mice were then anesthetized and subdivided in various subgroups for analysis of contractility (pressure-volume loop), morphology, biochemistry or resistance to I/R (30-min occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) followed by reperfusion and measurement of the area at risk and infarct size). In some mice, the phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor wortmannin was administered (24 µg/kg ip) 15 min before LAD. RESULTS: We found that IH did not induce myocardial hypertrophy; rather both contractility and cardiac function improved with greater number of capillaries per unit volume and greater expression of VEGF-R2, but not of VEGF. Besides increasing the phosphorylation of protein kinase B (Akt) and the endothelial isoform of NO synthase with respect to control, IH reduced the infarct size and post-LAD proteins carbonylation, index of oxidative damage. Administration of wortmannin reduced the level of Akt phosphorylation and worsened the infarct size. CONCLUSION: We conclude that the PI3K/Akt pathway is crucial for IH-induced cardioprotection and may represent a viable target to reduce myocardial I/R injury.


Subject(s)
Hypoxia/metabolism , Myocardium/metabolism , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Animals , Hemodynamics , Male , Mice , Myocardial Contraction , Myocardial Reperfusion Injury/metabolism , Myocardial Reperfusion Injury/physiopathology , Neovascularization, Physiologic , Oxidative Stress , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt/metabolism , Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-2/metabolism
16.
Arthritis Res Ther ; 12(2): R52, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20334640

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-response, evoked in mice by the overexpression of class I major histocompatibility complex antigen (MHC-I), was proposed as a major mechanism responsible for skeletal muscle damage and dysfunction in autoimmune myositis. The present study was undertaken to characterize in more detail the ER stress-response occurring in myofibers of patients with inflammatory myopathies, focusing on the expression and distribution of Grp94, calreticulin and Grp75, three ER chaperones involved in immunomodulation. METHODS: Muscle biopsies were obtained from seven healthy subjects and 29 myositis patients, who were subdivided into groups based on the morphological evidence of inflammation and/or sarcolemmal immunoreactivity for MHC-I. Biopsies were analyzed by means of immunohistochemistry and western blot using anti-Grp94, anti-calreticulin and anti-Grp75 specific antibodies. Parallel analyses on these ER chaperones were conducted in rabbit and/or murine skeletal muscle after experimental induction of regeneration or systemic inflammation. RESULTS: Upregulation of Grp94 characterized regenerating myofibers of myositis patients (P = 0.03, compared with values detected in biopsies without signs of muscle regeneration) and developing and regenerating myofibers of mouse muscles. Conversely, levels of calreticulin and Grp75 increased about fourfold and twofold, respectively, in patient biopsies positive for sarcolemmal MHC-I immunoreactivity, compared with healthy subjects and patients negative for both inflammation and MHC-I labeling (P < 0.005). Differently from calreticulin, the Grp75 level increased significantly also in patient biopsies that displayed occasional sarcolemmal MHC-I immunoreactivity (P = 0.002), suggesting the interference of other mechanisms. Experimental systemic inflammation achieved in mice and rabbits by a single injection of bacterial lipopolysaccharide significantly increased Grp75 and calreticulin but not MHC-I expression in muscles. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that, in myositis patients, muscle regeneration and inflammation, in addition to MHC-I upregulation, do evoke an ER stress-response characterized by the increased expression of Grp94 and Grp75, respectively. The increase in the muscle Grp75 level in patients showing occasional immunoreactivity for sarcolemmal MHC-I might be considered further as a broader indicator of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy.


Subject(s)
Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/metabolism , Myositis/metabolism , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/metabolism , Animals , Calreticulin/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Female , HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Histocompatibility Antigens Class I/metabolism , Humans , Lipopolysaccharides/pharmacology , Male , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred Strains , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/pathology , Muscle Weakness/metabolism , Muscle Weakness/pathology , Myositis/pathology , Rabbits , Regeneration , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/chemically induced , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/pathology , Up-Regulation , Young Adult
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